The Bárány Society position on 'Cervical Dizziness'.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of Vestibular Research-Equilibrium & Orientation Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.3233/VES-220202
Barry M Seemungal, Yuri Agrawal, Alexander Bisdorff, Adolfo Bronstein, Kathleen E Cullen, Peter J Goadsby, Thomas Lempert, Sudhir Kothari, Phang Boon Lim, Måns Magnusson, Hani J Marcus, Michael Strupp, Susan L Whitney
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Abstract

This paper describes the Bárány Society Classification OverSight Committee (COSC) position on Cervical Dizziness, sometimes referred to as Cervical Vertigo. This involved an initial review by a group of experts across a broad range of fields, and then subsequent review by the Bárány Society COSC. Based upon the so far published literature, the Bárány Society COSC takes the view that the evidence supporting a mechanistic link between an illusory sensation of self-motion (i.e. vertigo - spinning or otherwise) and neck pathology and/or symptoms of neck pain - either by affecting the cervical vertebrae, soft tissue structures or cervical nerve roots - is lacking. When a combined head and neck movement triggers an illusory sensation of spinning, there is either an underlying common vestibular condition such as migraine or BPPV or less commonly a central vestibular condition including, when acute in onset, dangerous conditions (e.g. a dissection of the vertebral artery with posterior circulation stroke and, exceedingly rarely, a vertebral artery compression syndrome). The Committee notes, that migraine, including vestibular migraine, is by far, the commonest cause for the combination of neck pain and vestibular symptoms. The committee also notes that since head movement aggravates symptoms in almost any vestibular condition, the common finding of increased neck muscle tension in vestibular patients, may be linked as both cause and effect, to reduced head movements. Additionally, there are theoretical mechanisms, which have not been explored, whereby cervical pain may promote vaso-vagal, cardio-inhibitory reflexes and hence by presyncopal mechanisms, elicit   transient   disorientation and/or imbalance. The committee accepts that further research is required to answer the question as to whether those rare cases in which neck muscle spasm is associated with a vague sense of spatial disorientation and/or imbalance, is indeed linked to impaired neck proprioception. Future studies should ideally be placebo controlled and double-blinded where possible, with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria that aim for high specificity at the cost of sensitivity. To facilitate further studies in "cervical dizziness/vertigo", we provide a narrative view of the important confounds investigators should consider when designing controlled mechanistic and therapeutic studies. Hence, currently, the Bárány COSC refrains from proposing any preliminary diagnostic criteria for clinical use outside a research study. This position may change as new research evidence is provided.

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巴拉尼协会关于 "颈椎病头晕 "的立场。
本文介绍了巴拉尼学会分类监督委员会(COSC)对颈性头晕(有时也称为颈性眩晕)的立场。这涉及到一个由各领域专家组成的小组进行的初步审查,以及随后由巴拉尼学会 COSC 进行的审查。根据迄今为止已发表的文献,Bárány Society COSC 认为,缺乏证据支持自我运动的虚幻感觉(即眩晕--旋转或其他)与颈部病理和/或颈部疼痛症状之间的机理联系--无论是通过影响颈椎、软组织结构还是颈神经根。当头部和颈部的联合运动引发旋转的错觉时,要么是潜在的普通前庭疾病,如偏头痛或前庭性眩晕,要么是较少见的中枢性前庭疾病,包括急性发作时的危险情况(如椎动脉夹层伴后循环中风,以及极为罕见的椎动脉压迫综合征)。委员会注意到,偏头痛(包括前庭性偏头痛)是迄今为止导致颈痛和前庭症状并存的最常见原因。委员会还注意到,由于头部运动几乎会加重任何前庭疾病的症状,前庭患者颈部肌肉紧张度增加这一常见现象可能与头部运动减少既有因果关系又有联系。此外,还有一些尚未探讨的理论机制,即颈椎疼痛可能会促进血管迷走神经和心抑制反射,从而通过突触前机制引起短暂的迷失方向和/或失衡。委员会同意需要进一步研究,以回答颈部肌肉痉挛伴有模糊的空间迷失感和/或失衡感的罕见病例是否确实与颈部本体感觉受损有关。未来的研究最好应尽可能采用安慰剂对照和双盲法,并制定严格的纳入和排除标准,以牺牲灵敏度为代价实现高特异性。为了促进对 "颈性头晕/眩晕 "的进一步研究,我们对研究人员在设计对照机理和治疗研究时应考虑的重要干扰因素进行了叙述。因此,目前 Bárány COSC 不会在研究之外提出任何用于临床的初步诊断标准。这一立场可能会随着新研究证据的提供而改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.30%
发文量
66
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Vestibular Research is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes experimental and observational studies, review papers, and theoretical papers based on current knowledge of the vestibular system. Subjects of the studies can include experimental animals, normal humans, and humans with vestibular or other related disorders. Study topics can include the following: Anatomy of the vestibular system, including vestibulo-ocular, vestibulo-spinal, and vestibulo-autonomic pathways Balance disorders Neurochemistry and neuropharmacology of balance, both at the systems and single neuron level Neurophysiology of balance, including the vestibular, ocular motor, autonomic, and postural control systems Psychophysics of spatial orientation Space and motion sickness Vestibular rehabilitation Vestibular-related human performance in various environments
期刊最新文献
Vestibular migraine as a mimic of benign paroxysmal positioning vertigo and Meniere's disease. Effects of monaural sound stimulation on subjective visual vertical. Simulator sickness among helicopter pilots: Incidence, threshold and severity using the SSQ. The vestibular symptomatology of Machado-Joseph Disease. Is vestibular function related to human hippocampal volume?
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